IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
IN AND FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY
STATE OF DELAWARE ) CRIMINAL ACTION NUMBERS
)
v. ) IN-05-06-1529 thru IN-05-06-1533 and
) IN-05-06-2390 thru IN-05-06-2394
JAMES E. COOKE )
) ID No. 0506005981
Defendant )
Submitted: May 10, 2006
Decided: September 8, 2006
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Upon Motions of Defendant to Suppress - DENIED
Steve P. Wood, Esquire, State Prosecutor, and Diane C. Walsh, Deputy Attorney General,
Department of Justice, for State of Delaware
J. Brendan O’Neill, Esquire, and Kevin J. O’Connell, Esquire, of Wilmington, Delaware,
attorneys for the defendant
HERLIHY, Judge
1
Defendant James Cooke has been indicted for murder in the first degree (the
deceased being Lindsey Bonistall), felony murder in the first degree (murder-rape of
Lindsey Bonistall), rape first degree (Lindsey Bonistall), burglary first degree (Lindsey
Bonistall’s apartment), arson in the first degree (the apartment in which Lindsey Bonistall
lived), reckless endangering first degree (relating to that apartment), burglary second
degree (at the residence of Amalia Caudra), robbery second degree (Amalia Caudra), theft
misdemeanor (involving Amalia Caudra), burglary second degree (the residence of Cheryl
Harmon), and theft misdemeanor (involving Cheryl Harmon). While the Court’s decision
on Cooke’s suppression motions was under advisement, he filed a motion to sever into
three separate trials (1) the charges involving the death of Lindsey Bonistall, (2) the second
burglary and related theft charges, and (3) the other burglary and theft charge. The State
has just responded to that motion, and, obviously, the Court has not rendered a decision
on that severance motion.
Cooke has filed two motions to suppress. In one, he seeks to exclude evidence
seized pursuant to a search warrant for a pair of boots and a sample of his blood. The
blood was subjected to DNA testing. He challenges this warrant as lacking in probable
cause for the murder and the rape, among other offenses related to the murder. He also
claims the affidavit of probable cause contains false and misleading statements.
His second motion relates to a residence at 9 Lincoln Drive in Newark which he
shared off and on with his girlfriend. The police seized certain evidence pursuant to that
2
warrant and seized other items not within the scope of the warrant. The State contends,
however, these latter items were taken with the consent of the girlfriend. Cooke argues
that this search warrant lacked probable cause, was pretextual, and that his girlfriend was
coerced into giving permission to the police to take the items not related to the purpose of
the search warrant.
Cooke’s suppression motions are directed to the charges involving the death of
Lindsey Bonistall. For reasons which will become apparent, matters involving the other
charges will be discussed in this opinion. Nothing said in this opinion, however, is to be
viewed as a prejudgment on Cooke’s severance motion.
The Court finds that probable cause existed for the issuance of both search warrants.
Further, the search warrant for the boots and his blood does not contain false and
misleading statements. The Court finds that the search warrant for the residence was not
pretextual and that the additional items seized were obtained through the uncoerced consent
of the girlfriend. Both motions to suppress are DENIED.
Background
A brief recitation of some facts is necessary to place in context the Court’s
consideration of these motions. In the early morning hours of May 1, 2005 there was a
report of a fire at an apartment at 81-6 Thorn Lane in Newark, Delaware. The local fire
company, Aetna Hose and Ladder, responded and put out the fire. The Newark Fire
Marshall also went to the scene. A little earlier there had been a fire in a garage at 208
3
Murray Road in Newark. Because arson was suspected there, Det. Andrew Rubin of the
Newark Police had been called at home to investigate the garage fire.
Around noon on May 1st, the Fire Marshall called Det. Rubin to come to 81-6
Thorn Lane. He had discovered some unusual writing on the wall inside the burnt
apartment and wanted the detective to see it. When Det. Rubin arrived, he saw writing
referring to the KKK, “more bodies are going to be turning up dead,” and “we want our
weed back, give us our drugs back.” Det. Rubin and the Fire Marshall looked around the
apartment.
The Fire Marshall believed the fire had originated in the bathroom. Det. Rubin
looked into it and noted that there was a significant amount of damage. He also saw a lot
of debris in the bathtub. Det. Rubin then went elsewhere in the apartment while the Fire
Marshall continued looking through the debris in the bathtub. While doing so, he found
what he believed was a body. He called for Det. Rubin. The two of them continued to
sift through the debris. When they found what appeared to be fingers, they stopped. Det.
Rubin then secured the apartment as a crime scene and summoned the evidence detection
officer(s). Further examination of the tub revealed a gag on the body that had been tied.
Underneath the body was a cord which police then believed also had been tied at one time.
The body was that of Lindsey Bonistall.
The Crimes
On June 8, 2005, when Det. Rubin sought the search warrant for Cooke’s blood and
for a pair of boots, the Newark Police were investigating four sets of crimes which they
1 Infra pp. 8-13.
4
believed were connected, possibly through the participation of Cooke. These crimes are
described here in summary fashion for clarity’s sake:
March 8, 2005 - burglary at 208 Murray Road in which the burglar left aboot print.
April 26-27, 2005 - burglary at 11-2 Thorn Lane, Town Court Apartments,the home of Cheryl Harmon (hereinafter referred to as “the Harmonburglary”).
April 30, 2005 - second burglary at 208 Murray Road.
April 30, 2005 - home invasion burglary at 209 West Park Place, home ofAmalia Cuadra and Carolina Bianco (hereinafter referred to as “the homeinvasion”).
April 30-May 1, 2005 - burglary, rape and homicide of Lindsey Bonistall ather apartment at 81 Thorn Lane, Town Court Apartments (hereinafterreferred to as “the homicide” or “the murder scene”).
As described in the affidavit for Cooke’s blood and boots,1 the connection between
some or all of these offenses was made initially in a call to 911. Subsequent to the call,
Cooke’s girlfriend and mother of three of his children, identified the caller as Cooke.
Part I
Search Warrant for Blood Sample and Boots
Parties’ Claims
Cooke concedes that there are sufficient facts in the affidavit to link him to the home
invasion incident on April 30th at 209 Park Place. But, he argues, there is insufficient
2 438 U.S. 154, 98 S.Ct. 2674, 57 L.Ed.2d. 667 (1978).
3 See Del. Const. of 1897, art. I, § 6. (“The people shall be secure in their persons,(continued...)
5
information stated in the affidavit to link him to the murder and rape. Further, he asserts
linking these two incidents does not provide probable cause for the murder. He states that
his girlfriend’s identification of his voice on the 911 call fails to link him to the murder.
He claims that Det. Rubin’s conclusory statement in the search warrant affidavit, that the
caller had facts only someone present would know, lacks requisite detail. The affidavit
must recite facts, he argues. Det. Rubin’s statement, Cooke claims, is not a fact but an
opinion. Opinions do not provide the basis for probable cause. Such an opinion is not,
therefore, subject to a neutral magistrate’s scrutiny.
Alternatively, Cooke argues that there are false and misleading statements in the
affidavit. Even if the full affidavit were sufficient to establish probable cause in relation
to the murder, if the false and/or misleading statements are removed, the remainder does
not establish probable cause. This argument implicates Franks v. Delaware.2
The State’s responses are that the affidavit provides sufficient probable cause to link
Cooke to the murder. Further it argues that obtaining his blood for DNA testing was,
therefore, lawful. It asserts there are no false or misleading statements in the affidavit.
Finally, the State contends there was probable cause to seize Cooke’s boots.
Applicable Standards
The Delaware Constitution provides that a search warrant may be issued only upon
a showing of probable cause.3 The constitutional requirements for search warrants are
3(...continued)houses, papers and possessions, from unreasonable searches and seizures; and no warrant to searchany place, or to seize any person or thing, shall issue without describing them as particularly asmay be; nor then, unless there be probable cause supported by oath or affirmation.”).
4 See DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 11, 2306 (2001) (“The application or complaint for a searchwarrant shall be in writing, signed by the complainant and verified by oath or affirmation. It shalldesignate the house, place, conveyance or person to be searched and the owner or occupant thereof(if any), and shall describe the things or persons sought as particularly as may be, and shallsubstantially allege the cause for which the search is made or the offense committed by or inrelation to the persons or things searched for, and shall state that the complainant suspects thatsuch persons or things are concealed in the house, place, conveyance or person designated andshall recite the facts upon which such suspicion is founded.”)
5See DEL. CODE ANN. tit. 11, § 2307 (2001) (“If the judge, justice of the peace or othermagistrate finds that the facts recited in the complaint constitute probable cause for the search, thatperson may direct a warrant to any proper officer or to any other person by name for service. Thewarrant shall designate the house, place, conveyance or person to be searched, and shall describethe things or persons sought as particularly as possible, and may be returnable before any judge,justice of the peace or magistrate before whom it shall also direct to be brought the person or thingsearched for if found, and the person in whose custody or possession such person or thing isfound, to be dealt with according to law.”)
6 Dorsey v. State, 761 A.2d 807, 811 (Del. 2000)(quoting Pierson v. State, 338 A.2d 571,573 (Del. 1975).
6
codified in Sections 2306 and 2307 of Title 11 of the Delaware Code. Section 2306
provides that an application for a search warrant must “state that the complainant su spects
that such persons or things are concealed in the house, place, conveyance or person
designated [in the search warrant application] and shall recite the facts upon which such
suspicion is founded.” 4 Section 2307 provides that a warrant may issue only upon a
judicial determination of probable cause.5
A “four-corners” tes t is used to determine whether an app lication for a warrant
demonstrates probable cause.6 Under this test, sufficient facts must appear on the face of
7 Id.
8 Id.
9 Jensen v. State, 482 A.2d 105, 112 (Del. 1984)(citing Spinelli v. United State, 393 U.S.410, 419, 89 S.Tc. 584, 590, 21 L.Ed.2d 637 (1969).
10 State v. Sisson, 883 A.2d 868, 876 (Del. Super. Ct. 2005) (citing Jensen v. State, 482A.2d at 105).
11 Edwards v. State, 320 A.2d 701, 703 (Del. 1974).
12 Gardner v. State, 567 A.2d 404, 409 (Del. 1989).
13 462 U.S. 213, 103 S. Ct. 2317, 76 L.Ed.2d. 527 (1983).
7
the affidavit so that a reviewing court can glean from that document alone the factual basis
for a determination that probable cause ex ists.7 Stated another way, the supporting
affidavit must se t forth sufficient or adequate facts for a neutral judicial officer to form a
reasonable belief that an offense has been committed and that seizable property would be
found in a particular place or on a particular person.8 The test for probable cause in
support of a search warrant is much less rigorous than that governing the admission of
evidence at trial and requires only that a probability, and not a prima facie showing, of
criminal activity be established.9 Great deference must be paid by a reviewing court of a
magistra te who has made a finding of probable cause to issue a search warrant.10 The
affidavit must be considered as a whole, and not in an isolated, seriatim fashion.11 A
common sense review of the affidavit is taken rather than a hypertechnical one.12
In Illinois v. Gates13, the United States Supreme Court reiterated the traditional
“totality of the circumstances” test for the issuance of search warrants. The Gates Court
14Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. at 238-39, 103 S.Ct. at 2332, 76 L.Ed.2d at 548 (1983)(emphasis added) (quoting Jones v. United States, 362 U.S. 257, 271, 80 S. Ct. 725, 736, 4L.Ed.2d 697, 708 (1960)).
15 Gardner v. State, 567 A.2d at 409 (quoting Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. at 232, 103 S.Ct. At 2329, 76 L.Ed.2d. at 544).
8
viewed the rule from the perspective of the magistrate presented with a request for a search
warran t:
The task of the issuing magistrate is simply to make a practica l,
commonsense decision whether, given a ll the circumstances set forth in the
affidavit before him. . . there is a fair probability that contraband or
evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place. And the duty of a
reviewing court is simply to ensure that the magistrate had a “substantial
basis for. . . conclud[ing] that probable cause existed.” 14
In applying Gates, the Delaware Supreme Court has observed that Gates
“emphasized that the ‘assessment of probabilities’ that flows from the evidence presented
in support of the warrant ‘must be seen and weighed not in terms of library analysis by
scholars, but as understood by those versed in the field of law enforcement.’” 15
Discussion
The analysis of the issues presented, of course, begins by looking at the search
warrant affidavit sworn to by Det. Rubin:
1. Your Affiant is Detective Andrew Rubin of the Newark Police
Depar tment. Detective Rubin has been a Newark Police Officer since
1997 and is currently assigned as a Detective in the Criminal
Investigations Division. Detective Rubin has received advanced
police training from, among other agencies, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, Delaware State Police, New Jersey Sex Crimes Officers
Association & MAGLOCLEN.
9
2. The statements contained in this affidavit are based in part upon
information provided by victims, witnesses, and other law
enforcement officers, along with your affiant’s experience and
background as a Law Enforcemen t Officer. S ince this aff idavit is
being submitted for the limited purpose of securing a search warrant,
you affiant has not included each and every fact known concerning
this investigation. However, your affiant does not believe he has
excluded any fact or circumstance that would tend to defeat the
establishment of probable cause. Your affiant has set forth only the
facts that you a ffiant believes are necessary to e stablish probable
cause.
3. On 03/08/05, a burglary occurred at 208 Murray Rd in Newark, DE.
During the burglary, the suspect entered the residence via the
bathroom window. The suspect then stepped onto the toilet and then
onto the floor. The suspect left a boot print on a roll of toilet paper
on the floor.
4. On 04/30/05, at about 0045 hours, a burglary occurred again at 208
Murray Rd in Newark, DE. During this burglary, the suspect entered
the residence via the same bathroom window.
5. On 04/30/05, at about 0130 hours, just 45 minutes after the Murray
Road burglary, your affiant was notified of a home invasion burglary
that had occurred at 209 W Park Place, Newark, New Castle County,
Delaware. Your affiant responded to the scene and was advised that
the victim was inside the residence.
6. Your affiant entered the residence and contacted the victim, who was
identified as Amalia Cuadra. Your affiant conducted an interview
with Cuadra. Cuadra, referred to herein as V, states that she had
gone to bed in her bedroom at about 2345 hours. V then awoke and
someone was shining a flashlight in her face. The subject holding the
flashlight, referred to herein as S, then sta ted “Shut the fuck up or I’ll
kill you” as he continued to shine the flashlight in her face. S then
stated, “Where’s your money? I know you have money.” V
hesitated and then got out of bed, wrapping her comforter around her.
V walked a few steps to her desk to her wallet, which was on the
desk. V took her wallet and gave $45.00 USC from her wallet.
10
7. Your affiant asked V to describe S. In the initial interview and in
follow-up interviews, V described S as follows: B/M, 28-33 years of
age, 5"5" - 5"8", husky build, husky deep face, no facial hair and
wearing a dark or grey jacket or hoody, grey wool knit gloves and a
wool hat.
8. After taking the USC from V, S stated “Give me the credit cards
too.” V then gave S her Delta American Express Card and her
University of Florida Alumni Visa Card. S moved his right hand
around his side to give the impression to V that he had a gun. V
began to scream for her roommate and S ran out of the bedroom.
9. While checking the residence, it was determined that S had entered
the residence by removing a pane of glass from the rear door and
damaged the doorframe in the process. V checked her property and
found that her light blue/grey colored Jansport backpack was missing
from the living room. V’s Apple I-pod and bottle of Trimspa diet
medication had been removed from the residence, along with her
roommate, Carolina Bianco’s Samsung cell phone.
10. V called her bank card company the next day and found that someone
had attempted to use her Visa card on 04/30/05 at about 0419 hours
at an ATM machine located at 211 Elkton Rd in Newark. Your
affiant retrieved the tape from the ATM machine and viewed it. On
the tape, a sub ject is seen walking up to the ATM machine. This
subject is wearing a hooded sweatshirt that appears grey in color,
wool knit gloves and sneakers.
11. A “wanted” poster containing scenes from the ATM video, along
with a sketch done by a V and a police sketch artist, was distributed
to areas around New Castle County.
12. On 05/31/05, Newark Police received a call from a confidential
source, referred to herein as UC-1, stating that they believed James
Cooke, an employee o f the Payless Shoe Store in the College Square
Shopping Center, Newark, was the person in the ATM photos.
13. On 06/01/05, Newark Police Detectives contacted UC-1 in person.
UC-1 stated that he was sure that Cooke was the person in the ATM
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photos. Specifically, UC-1 stated that the face looked like Cooke and
the shoes in the photos were the same ones as sold in the Payless
store. UC-1 advised that another confidential source, referred to
herein as UC-2, had further information about Cooke.
14. On 06/01/05, Detectives contacted UC-2 and UC-2 advised that the
ATM photo looked like James Cooke, a former employee. After UC-
2 posted the “wanted” poster in the inside of the store window, it was
removed by someone. After that day, Cooke never returned to work
at the store, without explanation. UC-2 provided Cooke’s pedigree
information to Detectives. This information indicated that Cooke
resides at 9 Lincoln Dr, Newark.
15. On 06/07/05, Detec tives contacted Cooke’s girlfr iend, Rochelle
Campbell, at the residence. Campbell agreed to a formal interview
at Newark PD HQ. During the interview, Campbell recalled the
night of 04/30/05 and stated that she and her boyfriend, James Cooke,
were in their residence. At sometime in the early morn ing hours,
Cooke left the residence for a short period of time and returned to the
residence carrying a backpack. Campbell watched as Cooke went
through the backpack. Inside the backpack, Campbell could see
credit cards, an I-pod and a luggage tag with the name that Campbell
pronounced as “Amelia.” Campbell also saw a bottle of diet pills and
a cellular phone.
16. Sometime early in the morning, Cooke left the residence to use the
card and returned not having received any money. Cooke had
diposed of the bag and its contents.
17. Campbell was shown the photos from the ATM machine and she was
100% sure that Cooke was the one depicted in the photos attempting
to use the card.
18. V viewed the ATM photos and was sure that the person in the ATM
photos was the one who entered her residence.
19. Cooke’s physical description matches that of the suspect described by
V.
12
20. On 050105, Newark Police and Aetna Fire Department were
dispatched to 81 Thorn Lane, Apt #6, Town Court Apartments in
Newark, New Castle County, Delaware, for a report of a fire.
Arriving units found smoke and fire and it was extinguished by Aenta
personnel. The apartment appeared to be unoccupied. Newark Fire
Marshall Henry Baynum arrived on the scene and conducted a
preliminary investigation. He believed that the fire began in the
bathroom. Baynum was then called away to another fire.
Maintenance personnel changed the lock to the apartment and the
scene was secured by Baynum.
21. Baynum returned to the scene at about 1130 hours on 05/01/05. He
began his investigation and immediately noticed writing on the walls
of the apartment that caused him concern . He had not prev iously
noticed the writing. Baynum then contacted the Newark Police and
your affiant was notified.
22. Your affiant arrived on the scene and found that there was writing, in
magic marker, on the inside of the front door and the interior of the
living room walls of the apartment. Baynum advised that he believes
that the statements were written prior to the fire.
23. Your affiant and Baynum continued into the bathroom and Baynum
began to investigate the cause & origin of the fire. Baynum began to
move charred debris from the bathtub and he located what he believed
to be a human body underneath the debris.
24. Your affiant spoke with Christine Bush, a resident o f the apartment,
that arrived while your affiant was there. Bush advised that she had
last spoken with her roommate, Lindsey Bonistall, on 04/30/05 at
about 1430 hours.
25. Your affiant questioned Bush as to the statements written on the wall
and Bush admitted that she has smoked Marijuana in the apartment,
but they do not sell drugs from the apartment.
26. On 05/03/05, Dr. Jennie Vershvosky of the Delaware Medical
Examiner’s Office positively identified the human body as that of
Lindsey Bonistall and ruled the incident a homicide. She also found
DNA evidence, which is not the victim’s, upon the victim’s body.
13
27. On 05/02/05, the Newark Police Department received a 911 call from
a subject. In this phone call, the caller details parts of both of the
above listed crimes. The caller names a specific victim from the
home invasion. He then details facts about the homic ide that could
have only been know by someone present at the homicide scene,
including facts about the says the victim’s body was left and about the
content o f the writing on the wall.
28. On 06/06/05, your affiant played a portion of the 911 call for
Roche lle Campbell. Campbell advised that at that time she was 80%
sure that Cooke was the caller. Campbell and Cooke have (3)
children together and have been together for 9 years. She was re-
interviewed on 06/07/05 and at that time she advised that she had
spoken with Cooke about the call and was now sure that Cooke was
the caller detailing pieces of these crimes.
29. Your affiant believes there is probable cause to take a DNA sample
and suspect rape kit from Cooke to compare to the DNA found on the
victim’s body. In addition, your affian t believes there is probable
cause to seize a pair of black State Street boots, currently being worn
by Cooke, to compare to the boot print from the burglary at 208
Murray Rd.
As noted, Cooke concedes there is adequate probable cause to link him to the home
invasion/burglary at 209 W. Park Place (pa ragraphs 5-19 , 27). But, he says, that is all,
and that the home invasion cannot be linked to his alleged involvement with the murder
(see paragraphs 20-28). Cooke parses the affidavit too finely and not from a totality of
circumstances perspective.
He focuses too much of his argument on paragraph 27. That paragraph is
important, of course, but it must be read in context with the others. One of the things
linking Cooke to the home invasion is his girlfriend’s identification of his voice as the
14
caller (paragraph 28). There was more information recited in the affidavit linking Cooke
to the home invasion, but the identification of his voice is part of the probable cause
linking him to the murder.
That same caller made reference to facts about the murder. The link, which Cooke
disputes, however, is that it is the caller to 911 who made the link to these two recently
committed crimes, and who provided key details about both offenses in the same call. And
he concedes, as he must, that there is sufficient probable cause to link him to the home
invasion. The affidavit recites that there was writing on the walls in L indsey Bon istall’s
apartment which caused the Newark Fire M arshall concerns, sufficient concern to prompt
him to call the po lice (paragraph 21). Up un til that point in the affidavit, it appears that
no one was in the apartment during the fire; though one gleans from paragraph 20 that
arson may have been suspected.
Paragraphs 22 and 23 mention the follow-up investigation and a body being found
under debris in the bathtub. Det. Rubin recite s that the person calling 911 gave details
about ways in which Bonistall’s body was left and the conten t of the writing on the wall.
In paragraphs 27 and 28, the affiant links Cooke to the homicide and the murder
scene as set out earlier in the aff idavit. These are the paragraphs in contention in his
motion:
27. On 05/02/05, the Newark Police Department received a 911 call from
a subject. In this phone call, the caller details parts of both of the
above listed crimes. The caller names a specific victim from the
16See Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. at 238, 103 S.Ct. at 2332, 76 L.Ed.2d at 548; Gardnerv. State, 567 A.2d at 409.
15
home invasion. He then details facts about the homicide that could
have only been known by someone present at the homicide scene,
including facts about the ways the victim’s body was left and about
the content of the writing on the wall.
28. On 06/06/05, your affiant played a portion of the 911 call for
Roche lle Campbell who advised at that time that she was 80% sure
that Cooke was the caller. Rochelle Campbell was re-interviewed on
06/07/05 and at that time she advised that she had spoken with Cooke
about the call and was now sure that Cooke was the caller detailing
pieces of these crimes.
Paragraph 29 states the affiant’s belief that there is probable cause to take a DNA
sample and rape kit evidence from Cooke, who was in custody at the time the affidavit was
written, as well as a pair of black S tate Street boots being worn by Cooke to compare to
the boot print from the burglary at 208 Murray Road.
A
The issue before the Court is whether, when viewing th e totality of the
circumstances from a p ractical, common sense point of view, the affidavit establishes a
fair probability that Cooke’s DNA, rape kit samples and boots will connect him to the
homicide.16
Of primary importance is the fact that the 911 caller’s voice was identified as that
of James Cooke, as stated in paragraph 28 of the affidavit. The affidavit shows that
Cooke’s girlfriend recognized and identified his voice. The first time she heard the tape,
16
she said she was 80 percent sure the caller was Cooke. When she was re-interviewed, she
had spoken to Cooke and she was able to verify that he made the call. The Court
concludes that there is more than a “fair probability” that the 911 caller was James Cooke.
The next question is whether the affidavit adequately connects Cooke to the
homicide. As set forth in Paragraph 27, it was the 911 caller who established a connection
between the 209 W. Park Place home invasion and the homicide, which is important
because the mag istrate, and this Court as well, must look at the warrant as a whole not as
separate paragraphs. The warrant reflects (1) more than ample probable cause connecting
Cooke to the home invasion and (2) the connection between the crimes by asserting that
the 911 caller mentioned the name of a victim of the home invasion, detailed the way the
homicide victim’s body was left and referred to the content of the writing on the wall,
which appeared at the murder scene. Defendant argues that under Dorsey’s four corners
test, these facts do not es tablish probable cause to believe that the semen found on Lindsey
Bonistall ’s body was Cooke’s. The State argues that the anonymous phone call was the
first sign that the burglary/the home invasion and the homicide were connected, and that
this fact, in combination w ith the statements about the body and writing, estab lish probable
cause.
No doubt the affidavit offers more information about the burglary and the home
invasion than about the homicide, but this difference is not determinative. There is no
state or federal requirement that a search warrant provide all the details known by the
17
officer preparing the warrant. Looking at the warrant as a whole, from a common sense
perspective, the warrant established that Cooke was the 911 caller and that the caller was
intimately familiar w ith both crime scenes. A lthough he argues that the magistrate could
only trust that the affiant’s conclusion was true, the Court finds otherwise.
The warrant states that the caller “details facts about the homicide that could have
only been known by someone present at the homicide,” and Cooke argues that this is a
conclusion offered without benefit of any supporting facts. However, the sentence goes
on to say that the caller provided information about how the victim’s body was left and
about the content of the writing on the wall at the homicide scene. In Paragraph 26, the
warrant also states that Dr. Jennie Vershvovsky of the Delaware Medical Examiner’s
Office ruled Ms. Bonistall’s death a homicide and located DNA evidence, other than
Bonistall’s own, upon the victim’s body. Thus, the warrant communicated to the
magistrate that Lindsey Bonistall was murdered and had unidentified DNA on her body;
the warrant told the magistrate that the 911 caller was Cooke and that Cooke had non-
public, detailed information about both the home invasion and the homicide; it told him
that Cooke knew the name of the victim of the Park Place home invasion, that he knew
how the homicide victim’s body was left by the killer, and that the caller knew what was
written on the wall of the murder scene. These are not conclusions or opinions. These
are facts. The Court finds that these facts, while not detailing all the information known
to Newark Police, were sufficient to enable the magistrate to form a reasonable belief that
17Dorsey v. State, 761 A.2d at 811.
18Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. at 232, 103 S.Ct. at 2329, 76 L.Ed.2d at 554..
18
the crimes were linked, that Cooke was connected to the them and that se izable property
would be found on Cooke’s person.17
As the Gates Court emphasized, a search warrant must be weighed “as understood
by those versed in the field of law enforcement.” 18 In this case, the affiant established a
link between the crimes by way of the 911 caller, and that caller was none other than
James Cooke. It strains logic to concede probable cause for the home invasion and seek
to sever it for the homicide when one person linked the two crimes in one phone call. The
Court concludes that under the Gates totality of the circumstances test and the Dorsey four
corners test the affidavit on its face creates a connection between Cooke and the homicide
and establishes probab le cause to take his DNA and rape kit samples fo r comparison with
the DNA found on Lindsey Bonistall’s body.
B
As to the boots, Defendant argues that the affidavit contains no facts connecting
Cooke or his boots to the burglary at 208 Murray Road. The State argues that the affidavit
establishes probable cause to seize the boots and that, in addition, the boots were taken in
plain view because Cooke was wearing them at the time of his arre st.
Defendant is correct that the affidavit does not state that the 911 caller knew about
the burglary at 208 Murray Road, but it does state that the Murray Road burglar left a boot
19438 U.S. 154, 98 S. Ct. 2674, 57 L.Ed.2d 667 (1978).
19
print and that Cooke was wearing boots at the time the affidavit was written. In addition,
the affidavit connects the crimes. On March 8, 2005, a burglar entered 208 Murray Road
by way of the bathroom window and left a boot print on the floor. The same house was
burglarized again on April 30, 2005, and entry was again gained by the bathroom window.
Only 45 minutes later 209 West Park Place was burglarized (the home invasion), and the
affidavit connects Cooke, as the 911 caller, to that home invasion. These facts are all
alleged in the affidavit, and the Court concludes tha t the affidav it establishes probab le
cause to seize Cooke’s boots for comparison purposes with the boot print from the Murray
Road burg lary.
C
Franks v. Delaware19
On February 1 and 2, 2006, th is Court held an evidentiary hearing based on
Cooke’s assertion that Det. Rubin made multiple false or misleading statements in the
affidavit. He argues that the evidence adduced at the hearing proves that Det. Rubin made
two misrepresentations: first, that only someone who was present at the homicide scene
could have known about the writing on the walls and, second, that the 911 caller detailed
facts about the way the victim’s body was left. Cooke contends that under Franks v.
Delaware, these statements are misleading, were recklessly made, and must be stricken
from the affidavit, leaving it devoid of any link between Cooke and the homicide.
20
The State argues that Rubin did not make any false or misleading statements and
that a Franks analysis is not necessary. The State further argues that even if the reference
to the writing on the walls is discounted (for reasons explained below) ample evidence
exists to establish probable cause.
Cooke’s Franks argument zeros in on paragraph 27 o f the affidav it, which is
presented here again for clarity’s sake:
On 05/02/05, the Newark Police Department received a 911 call from a
subject. In this phone call, the caller deta ils parts of both of the above listed
crimes. The caller names a specific victim from the home invasion. He then
details facts about the homicide that could have only been known by
someone present at the homicide scene, including facts about the ways the
victim’s body was left and about the content of the writing on the wall.
In Franks, the defendant asserted that the affiant fa lsely stated that he had personally
interviewed two of the defendant’s co-workers. The defendant further claimed that the
affiant falsely attributed statements to the co-workers about the defendant’s typical apparel
in order to establish probable cause to search the defendant’s apartment. The defendant
sought a hearing on the veracity of the affiant’s statements. The Delaware Supreme Court
affirmed this Court’s ruling that no attack upon the veracity of a warrant affidavit could
be made. The United States Supreme Court granted defendant’s petition for certiorari.
The Franks Court reached a two-part holding. First, if a defendant makes a
substantial preliminary showing that a false statement was knowingly and intentionally, or
with reckless disregard for the truth, included by the affiant in the warrant affidavit, and
20 Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. at 155, 98 S. Ct at 2676, 57 L.Ed.2d at 672.
21 Franks v. Delware, 438 U.S. at 156, 98 S.Ct. 2676, 57 L.Ed.2d at 672.
21
if the allegedly false statement is necessary to the finding of probable cause, the Fourth
Amendment requires that a hearing be held at the defendant’s request.20 Second, if the
allegation is established at the hearing by a preponderance of the evidence and, with the
affidavit’s false materia l set aside, the affidavit’s remain ing content is insufficient to
establish probable cause, the search warrant must be voided and the fruits of the search
excluded to the same extent as if probable cause were lacking on the face of the affidavit. 21
This Court has examined and considered the documentation Cooke submitted prior
to the hearing relating to the first prong of Franks. The hearing which was schedu led also
related to a number of issues ra ised in bo th of Cooke’s motions to suppress. But, in part,
the hearing was conducted to enable Cooke to make whatever additional record he desired
on the issue of whether there was a false sta tement o r were fa lse statements in the a ffidavit
and to insure completeness of that record. The scheduling of the hearing does not mean
the Court finds or found Cooke made the requisite preliminary showing Franks requires.
The hearing on this issue was no t only to de termine if the threshold Franks prong was met,
but if the record, once completed, demonstrated it had been met what the Court then
needed to do in the second part of the Franks analysis.
As a starting point, the Court notes that Cooke does not allege that Det. Rubin lied,
as the officer did in Franks. Rather, Cooke argues that Det. Rubin overstated the facts and
22 Evidence of rumors circulating after the 911 call was placed is not relevant to thisinquiry.
22
offered his opinion as to their weight. He contends first that Det. Rubin recklessly
presented as fact his opinion that only someone present at the murder scene could have
known about the writing on the walls. The evidence adduced at the hearing showed that
five or six firefighters were inside the apartment and could have seen the writing on the
walls. In fact, Rubin asked for a report of the writing each firefighter remembered seeing
on the walls, and one of the firefighters stated in his report on May 1, 2005, that he had
seen references to “KKK” and “white power.” Maintenance workers were also present
at the apartment to change the lock on May 1 at about 4:00 a.m ., and they had the
opportunity to see the writing which was on the living room wall. At about 2:00 p.m. the
next day, May 2, a message was posted on a University of Delaware website indicating
that the murder “was possibly drug related and there was something written on the wall
about stolen weed.” Later that day, the anonymous caller, now known to be Cooke,
placed the 911 call at 5:42 p .m. Det. Rubin himself printed out a copy of the website
posting on May 8, 2005, almost one month be fore he wrote the search warrant
application.22
Thus, it is undisputed that various police officers and firefighters saw the writing;
the maintenance staff may have seen the writing; and an internet posting referred to the
writing being drug-related. These events occurred hours before the 911 call was placed
23 Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. at 164-65, 98 S.Ct. 2681, 57 L.Ed.2d 678 (emphasisadded)(quoting United States v. Halsey, 257 F. Supp. 1002, 1005 (S.D.N.Y. 1966).
23
at 5:42 p.m. on May 2 , 2006. Cooke also supp lied to the Court a M ay 2, 2005, News
Journal article reporting a Newark Police news conference. The article does not mention
any writing on the walls of Bonis tall’s apartment or any thing about her being or poss ibly
being found tied up. However, as the State correctly points out, only the 911 caller made
accurate references to the content of the writing. The caller specifically mentioned “white
power” three times and also stated “And we be. . . they be writin ’ on the walls. Talk
about “KKK,” “white power.” None of the rumors was to this effect. The rumors show
that some knowledge of the writing had filtered into the community, but there is no
evidence about the exact nature of the writing other than what the 911 caller prov ided.
The following passage from Franks is instructive on the nature and extent of the
affiant’s belief that what he avers is true:
When the Fourth Amendment demands a factual show ing sufficient to
comprise ‘probab le cause,’ the obvious assumption is tha t there will be a
truthful showing (emphasis in or iginal). Th is does not mean ‘truthful’ in the
sense that every fact recited in the warran t affidavit is necessarily correct,
for probable cause may be founded upon hearsay and upon information
received from informants, as well as upon information within the affiant’s
own knowledge that sometimes must be garnered hastily. But surely it is to
be ‘truthful’ in the sense that the information put forth is believed or
appropriately accepted by the affiant as true (emphasis added).23
Using this language as a guide, the Court finds that Det. Rubin did not recklessly or
otherwise misrepresent the evidence about the writing on the walls and finds that he
24
believed that everything he stated in the affidavit was true. While there were rumors that
writing existed on the walls, there is no accurate evidence regarding the content of the
writing other than that provided by the 911 caller, James Cooke. The Court concludes that
Det. Rubin’s statement was a good faith effort to draft an affidavit that established
probable cause to link Cooke to the homicide without revea ling every detail about the
ongoing investigation.
In further support of his claims under Franks, Cooke asserts that Det. Rubin made
a false statement about the caller (Cooke’s) reference to the home invasion. Paragraph 27
states the caller names a specific victim of the home invasion.
This, Cooke contends, is false because the 911 caller referred to “Miss Calamina .”
There was no one by that name in the home that was invaded. Det. Rubin testified,
however, that when the intruder woke up Amalia Cuadra, she first thought it was her
house-mate Carolina Bianco and uttered her name. When the intruder told Caudra to take
off her clothes, she screamed Carolina’s name, apparently more than once, and the
intruder then fled. The book bag which the intruder may have took had her name tag on
it.
While dissimilar in spelling, the difference between “Calam ina” and either Am alia
or especially Carolina does not rise to the level of a false statement or a reckless statement.
Cooke further contends that Carolina was not a victim. That is a distinction without
significance as she was in the same house.
25
Cooke argues that there is another misleading s tatemen t in paragraph 27. His
reference here is to the sentence, “The caller names a specific victim from this home
invasion.” In his initial motion to suppress evidence seized through this search warran t,
he quotes from a section of the transcript prepared by the State (Newark Police or Attorney
General is unc lear):
Another lady named Miss Calamina, that owed us money for drugs. We
went in another house but the lady wasn’t there, but we didn’t come there for
the lady. W e came there for her man. Her name was Cheryl.
He claims that this statement is misleading because the woman in the home invasion
case whom the intruder asked to strip is Amalia Caudra. That, Cooke asserts, is a
significan tly different name from “Calamina.” But as noted earlier, when the intruder first
disturbed Caudra she thought it was her house-mate Carolina and spoke her name. When
the intruder told Caudra to undress, she screamed Carolina and apparently more than once.
In print, the names Carolina and Calamina differ. But, even in print, caution about
any difference has to be tempered with how they are pronounced. Because of the
importance of this issue, subsequent to the February hearing, the Court asked to listen
again to the tape or audio copy o f the 911 call which is subject of paragpraph 27 and
Cooke’s Franks argument. The role of pronunciation was a fac tor in the Court’s
evaluation of this argument. Also, Cooke’s argument was built around a transcript of the
call not the actual voice of the caller.
24 State’s Exhibit 8 in the suppression hearing.
25 The Court first heard it during the “proof positive” hearing on October 28, 2005. Allcounsel present in the suppression hearing were present on that occasion, too.
26 Out of an abundance of caution, during the trial if the State or the defense wishes tointroduce a transcript of the 911 call, the name part should be left blank. This admonition in noway changes the Court’s findings on this matter.
26
At the Court’s request, the State prepared of DVD of the 911 call. Another reason
for wanting to listen to the actual voice of the caller is tha t another transcription of the ca ll
which says “Miss Carolina (sp)” 24, was introduced in the hearing. The DVD is now Court
Exhibit #1.
The Court has listened to it several times.25 There are several preliminary
comments. First, the caller has an unusual accent. Two, he pronounced Newark as
“Nark.” Third, when the name is uttered there is a background type noise that sounds like
wind.
Having listened several times again to the portion of the tape where the name is
uttered, the Court finds the caller said Carolina, pronounced it as “Caroleena.” He also
could have said Calamina pronounced as “Calameena” but that does not seem as likely as
him saying “Caroleena.” There is no way to be 100 percent certain.26
That comment means that the Court cannot hold that Det. Rubin in paragraph 27,
when noting the caller mentioned a specific victim name made a false or misleading
statement or reck lessly made a false statement.
27 Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. at 155, 98 S.Ct. at 2676, 57 L.Ed.2d at 672.
27
Furthermore, having carefully considered the search warran t affidavit, an audio
copy of the 911 call, the evidence of community rumors about the writing on the walls pre-
existing the 911 call and the testimon ial evidence of De t. Rubin, the Court finds that Det.
Rubin did not misrepresent recklessly or otherwise the evidence when he stated that the
911 caller provided details about the writing on the wall that only someone present at the
crime scene could have known.27
Cooke also argues that Det. Rubin falsely or recklessly stated that the 911 caller
gave facts about the homicide victim’s body. In paragraph 27, Rubin stated that the caller
had provided details about “the ways the victim’s body was left” which could only have
been known by someone present at the crime scene. The transcript of the 911 call shows
that the caller stated that “And I guess they tied the girl up and killed her.” Cooke asserts
that this statement provides no facts at all. There is, however, one crucial fact presented
– that the vic tim was tied up. The evidence shows that being “tied up” is one of the major
characteristics of this murder. When the victim’s body was first discovered, the ligatures
were not apparent. But gags and/or ligatures were found but seen only by police or medical
examiner personnel and not by firefighters, maintenance personnel or others. One ligature
made out of a tee -shirt was tied around the victim’s neck. A gag was tied around her
mouth. Another binding formed from a severed cord from an electric iron was found
beneath her body. It was twisted and tied in a knot in the middle, apparently having been
28
used to tie her hands. Another binding, turned and knotted in a circular form, made from
a red shirt was found on the bathroom floor. Thus the evidence shows no fewer than four
separate ways in which the v ictim was tied up.
None of this information was released to the public or to the media, and there is no
evidence of rumors or public discussion about it. The Court finds that the 911 caller did
provided a highly relevant fact about the victim being tied up and that there is no evidence
that anyone other than the police and the fire marshal, and perhaps the medical examiner
were aware of this fact. The Court concludes that Cooke has not established by a
preponderance of the evidence that Det. Rubin made a false statement with a reckless
disregard of the truth about the 911 caller’s statement about how the body was found.
In sum, Cooke has failed to meet the threshold preliminary showing prong of
Franks. Assuming arguendo that he did, he has failed to meet his burden under the second
prong that there was false or misleading materia l in the affidavit. That finding, of course,
means there is no thing to excise from the affidav it.
For the reasons stated, Defendant James Cooke’s motion to suppress the evidence
seized under the search warrant for his DNA, rape kit evidence, and boots is DENIED.
Part II
Search Warrant for 9 Lincoln Drive
Background
The motion to suppress the evidence seized through this search warrant involves
more than whether it established sufficient probable cause. This motion has a factual
28 Transcript of Suppression Hearing (February 1, 2006) at p. 34,
29
setting leading up to its issuance and during its execution which create additional issues to
be resolved. That setting needs to be described.
Det. Rubin is the chief investigating officer for this case. He has testified that the
Newark Police received a “tip” on May 31, 2005 about Cooke. The police learned of a
potential residence address, 9 Lincoln Drive. They learned he had a 1999 capias
outstanding. Two detectives were assigned to contact Cooke and went to 9 Lincoln Drive
on June 1st. He was not there.
Cooke’s girlfriend, Rochelle Campbell, however, was home. She is the one to
whom the electric bills are sent for 9 Lincoln Drive. Neither of those detectives was called
as a witness during the suppression hearing. The girlfriend, however, did testify and she
related what happened. She testified the police came in the afternoon, and told her that
there was an outstanding warrant for Cooke for something that happened a “long time
ago.”28 She recalled there were two male detectives and that her son may have let them
in. She believes one or both detectives may have gone downstairs to the basement.
Campbell believes it was this first visit where the police asked her children (three of whom
are by Cooke) where he was. She was upset when her children, who had been outside
when this conversation happened, came inside and told her.
The police made a second visit to 9 Lincoln Drive. But before that (as best as she
could recall), two uniformed Newark officers stopped her in the street. It was in the
30
daytime and she had all four children with her, ages 8, 6, 3, and around one. She was told
to wait which she did until some detectives arrived around a half hour later. Meanwhile,
she testified, the police tried to entertain her children, but she was embarrassed because
this was happening in her neighborhood.
Several days later two officers came back, one of whom was a female. Again, this
was in the afternoon. The police said they wanted to talk to Cooke about some burglaries
and that these were more serious than the old charge. Cooke was not there.
The police came to Campbell’s home for a third time on June 6th. They did not
initially have a search warrant. Det. Rubin and Campbell agree that she insisted that the
police this time first get a search warrant. The police visit on this occasion was prompted
by information Cooke had been in touch with Campbell.
Campbell was upset with how the police treated her before June 6th, primarily the
stop and wait on the street. She says that an officer left her house to get the warrant but
the others stayed. Det. Rubin testified that the officers left and that when they returned
with the warrant, she was not at home. They waited for her, and she came home shortly
thereafter. The Court attaches no significance to this difference in recollection. There is
no evidence the police searched her house while waiting for the warrant. Campbell
explained her reason for insisting on a warrant:
Counsel: What was going through your mind during this time about thepolice and the whole situation with their being there and theirgoing to get a warrant?
31
Campbell: I wasn’t really upset that they were getting a warrant, becauseif I hadn’t been waiting outside for that half an hour, I wouldhave let them search again anyhow. I think I was just concernedwith the whole situation and I was just trying to figure oneverything.
Campbell also said she saw no reason to ask the police to leave or want to leave
herself. After getting it, Det. Rubin explained the search warrant to her and at some point
in the process explained that Cooke was a suspect in a murder. Det. Rubin described his
initial conversation with Campbell this way:
Counsel: And what did you explain to Ms. Campbell?
Det. Rubin: I gave her her greetings page, which tells her the objects thatwe are looking for. I told her why we were there. She thenactually pointed out to us the areas in the bathroom where shehad put Mr. Cooke’s belongings into some plastic containersand pointed those out to us.
Counsel: When she pointed out the area where Mr. Cooke’s belongingswere, approximately how long after that, that she pointed it out– did she do that from when you first arrived with the searchwarrant?
Det. Rubin: It was pretty quick. I mean, basically we came in, said we hadthis search warrant and where can we find James’ stuff, andshe showed it to us.
Counsel: And what in particular did she show you?
Det. Rubin: At that point she showed us these – she calls them Totes.They were blue plastic containers – I think they were blueplastic containers – large containers that she had put all hisstuff into. I don’t recall at this time how many there were. Ithink there was maybe two.
29 Transcript of Suppression Hearing (February 2, 2006) at pp. 54 - 55.
32
Counsel: Did she seem reluctant to you in any way to show you theseblue Totes?
Det. Rubin: No.
Counsel: Did she seem annoyed or angry with you that you were askingabout his belongings?
Det. Rubin: No.
Counsel: And when you arrived at the scene, is it safe to say that Ms.Campbell pointed those things out to you and did you finishconducting the search?
Det. Rubin: No. The search was mainly conducted by Detective Corcoran.Essentially what happened was while Detective Corcoran wasdoing the search, I was talking with Ms. Campbell down in thedining room at her dining room table. Agent Ross wasessentially the baby-sitter. I remember him going by with kidson his back. He was just playing with the kids. AndDetective Farrell was assisting him and assisting me at thesame time. She was kind of trying to help with the interviewand Agent Ross.29
Campbell’s testimony generally, except as noted below, concurs with Det. Rubin’s
recitation of the events. While talking to her at the house, he played the tape of the 911
call. She was reasonably sure the voice was Cooke’s. She and Det. Rubin discussed the
burglaries, a wanted poster for Cooke and that he was a suspect in a murder.
They spoke over a period of an hour and a half to two hours, but it was not
continuous. The telephone rang several times and interrupted their conversation. Cooke
was actually one of the callers. Campbell testified that an FBI agent told her at one point,
33
she could do it the easy way or the hard way. She thought, this was said around the time
Det. Rubin said he wanted her to go to police headquarters to give a statement. The same
agent also told her, she testified, that if she did not go willingly she might be arrested.
When asked what role the agent’s threat played in her decision to go to police
headquarters, she testified:
Defense Counsel: And you were afraid if you were arrested, what wasgoing to happen to your kids; right?
Campbell: Yes.
Defense Counsel: All right. So it’s fair to say, isn’t it, that the reasonthat you went from your house to the police station isbecause you were afraid if you didn’t go, they’d putyou under arrest?
Campbell: I – I probably would have. I wasn’t pressured to go.
Defense Counsel: Well, let’s back up a second.What I understood you to say was that you believed ifyou didn’t go to the police station, the told you theywere going to arrest you; right? That’s what they toldyou; right?
Campbell: Something to that extent.
Defense Counsel: All right. And you know from a few days before thatthey stopped you on the street and kept you there for ahalf an hour against your will; right?
Campbell: Yes.
Defense Counsel: And so you knew when they told you something, thatthey had the ability and the power to act on it becausethey had done that to you before on the street; right?
30 Transcript of Suppression Hearing (February 2, 2006) at pp. 105-106.
31 Quoted from transcript of her interview at the police station.
32 Id. at 78.
34
Campbell: Yes.
Defense Counsel: And you still had that in mind when you made thedecision to accompany them to the police station so youwouldn’t be arrested; right?
Campbell: But I was already talking to them at the house so Ididn’t really see any reason why not to accompany themto the police station.30
Also the agent told her that if she did not do so her kids might be taken from her.
Det. Rubin was not in the room when this was said, Campbell testified. Rubin, however,
gave a slightly different version. The FBI agent did not say anything at her residence. At
the police station, the agent said this:31
“Okay. Let me talk for a few minutes. First off, there’s a federalinvestigation involved in this. If you – I don’t believe that you are part ofwhat happened. I don’t believe you are involved. You are too good aperson. But I believe you know more about what your boyfriend has donethan what you are admitting to. I believe you have more knowledge and Ibelieve you can help us out. But I said that I don’t believe you are involvedin anything. But later on if we find out you were covering up for him, thatcould lead to problems for you, and you have four great children. If I – Imet them tonight. They are great children. The last thing you want to dois run into trouble or end up going away for awhile and you don’t get to seeyour children because of something your boyfriend did, not something youdid. You are a religious person, aren’t you? Do you think God would wantyou to cover up for something like that and leave your children without theirmother?”32
33 Id. at 67.
35
Detective Rubin testified that at the police station, however, he lost some patience
with her because she seemed to be withholding information:
I think in the beginning I was just making sure she understood that we werelooking for him and if she knows where he is and she keeps him from us,that she could get in trouble. Towards the end of the interview and then –when we returned to the house and she gave us more information and toldus that she had lied about something during that interview, I said – my tonebecame annoyed, like, “Hey, Rochelle, I’ve been trying to warn you. We’renot looking to arrest you, but if you keep doing these types of things, wemay have no choice.”33
Det. Rubin had driven Campbell to the police station. She was not handcuffed. She
was there about three hours. After giving a recorded interview (she knew it was being
recorded), he drove her back home. They arrived there around midnight.
While she was at the police station, the police had continued their search of the
residence. During that period a female officer had been minding Campbell’s children at
the apartment. Before going to the police station, she had been asked if this were okay and
if she were comfortable with that. She indicated that it was.
According to Campbell, she was shown a picture of Cooke at an ATM machine.
Gloves appear in that picture and the police asked her about them. She is not sure she
recognized the gloves pictured, but of her own volition she went to a bag upstairs,
retrieved some gloves and gave them to the police. In a further conversation with the
police about Cooke’s writing or misspelling of words, she retrieved a piece of paper on
which he had written something.
36
When Det. Rubin returned with Campbell to her home, Det. Corcoran told him of
things he had found during his search while she was at the police station. The items were
not contraband. Det. Rubin, therefore, took the approach of getting Campbell to sign a
consent to search. On that consent form would be listed these items which were not
related to the items sought through the search warrant.
Det. Rubin testified he showed and read to her a consent to search form. He said
she had no hesitation in signing it. Unlike before, there were no threats about arrest.
Campbell also testified that the police were still searching her house when she and Det.
Rubin returned from the police station. She was shown a paper which she signed. At the
suppression hearing, she could not recall if she read it with Det. Rubin or later read her
copy at the house. She testified that the police said she had to sign it.
But she also testified that whether she read it at the time of the search or not, it was
explained to her and she knew what it was for. While her testimony was uncertain about
how much she recalls reading from the consent form, she was clear that she read the list
of items on it before signing:
I, Rochelle Campbell hereby authorize Det. A. Rubin, a member of theNewark Police, and any other officer designated to assist, to conduct acomplete search of: 9 Lincoln Dr., Newark located at: 9 Lincoln Dr,Newark.I further authorize the above number of the Newark Police Department toremove any letters, documents, papers, materials or other property which isconsidered pertinent to the investigation, provided that I am subsequentlygiven a receipt for anything which is removed.
37
I have knowingly and voluntarily given my consent to search without fear,threat or promise (expressed or implied). In addition, I have been advisedby Det. A. Rubin #9574 that I have the right to refuse giving my consent tosearch.
/s/ Rochelle Campbell /s/ Det. D. Corcoran 9537
Date: 06/07/05 Time: 0020
ITEMIZED LIST OF ITEMS TAKEN AS EVIDENCE
Item No. Location Found Time Officer Description & Quantity
1 Bedroom 0010 Corcoran Handwriting Sample
2 Bedroom 1940 " Flashlight
3 Rear Bedroom - 2 FL 2025 " Usher CD
4 Diaper Bag - Bedroom 0012 Rubin Gloves
5 Living Room 2330 Corcoran Book - “The Good Wife”
6 (1) Bedroom/(1) BmtBedroom
2039/2300 " (2) Bent Screwdrivers
She signed it, according to the time which Det. Rubin wrote on it, at 12:20 a.m. on
June 7th. All the items were actua lly “seized” or “recovered” prior to her signature. She
may have been shown, prior to signing the consent form, the inventory list of items seized
under the search warrant. The items seized under the search warrant are a pair of blue and
white men’s shoes, composition book, cassette tape, various documents, disposable
camera, cell phone - Nokia, and a bicycle. She testified that she consented to the police
taking those items as well. A motivation may have been her assessment of the limited or
no evidentiary value of the items on the consent form.
34 Transcript of Suppression Hearing (February 1, 2006) at pp. 155-56.
38
Campbell at the end of much direct, re-direct, cross, and re-cross examination
testified she was “apprehensive”34 about the police search and, at the beginning wanted the
police to get a search warrant, but once they did, she was f ine with everything that
happened.
Applicable Standards
When reviewing the standards applicable to the search warrant to obtain Cooke’s
blood sample and the boots, the Court enunciated the standards equally applicable to the
review of this search warrant. They do not require repeating.
Discussion
Since the analysis o f the seizure of the items seized a t 9 Linco ln Drive starts with
the search warrant, it needs to be quoted:
Upon the annexed affidavit and application or complaint for search warrant,
as I am satisfied that there is probable cause to believe that certain property,
namely:
ITEMS TO BE SEARCHED FOR AND SEIZED:
Any and all paperwork o r information, elec tronic or o therwise , that would
indicate the whereabouts of James Cooke, including: Caller ID devices and
cellular telephone address book contact information.
Used or intended to be used for: Prosecution of the crimes of Shoplifting
11/0840 and/or Hindering Prosecution 11/1244 and/or Criminal Contempt
11/1271.
Is being concealed on the (premises)(person) described in the annexed
affidavit and applica tion or complain t:
39
1. Your Affiant is Detective Andrew Rubin of the Newark Police
Department. Detective Rubin has been a Newark Police Officer since
1997 and is currently assigned as a Detective in the Criminal
Investigations Division. Detective Rubin has been involved in numerous
investigations that have resulted in arrests and has drafted and executed
search warrants pursuant to those investigations. Detective Rubin has
received advanced police training from, among other agenc ies, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, Delaware State Police, New Jersey Sex
Crimes Officers Assocation & MAGLOCEN.
2. The statements contained in this affidavit are based in part upon
information provided by victims, witnesses, and other law enforcement
officers, along with your affiant’s experience and background as a Law
Enforcement Officer. Since this affidavit is being submitted for the
limited purpose of securing a search warrant, your affiant has not
included each every fact known concerning this investigation. However,
your affiant does not believe he has excluded any fact or circumstance
that would tend to defeat the establishment of probable cause. Your
affiant has set forth only the facts that your affiant believes are necessary
to establish probable cause.
3. On 1/25/99, James Cooke (DOB 12/02/70), aka James Edwards, was
arrested pursuant to a warrant for that crime issued by JP Court #20. He
was released on $500 unsecured bail to appear in JP Court #20 on
03/03/99 for trial. According to CJIS, Cooke never appeared for trial
and a Capias was issued on 03/18/99 by JP #20.
4. On 06/01/05, Newark Police received information that Cooke has been
residing at 9 Lincoln Drive in Newark, New Castle County, Delaware.
Detectives contacted Rochelle Campbell (DOB 01/23/78), a resident at
the premises and she advised that Cooke was not at home and had not
been there for a few days.
5. On 06/06/05, Detective re-contacted Rochelle Campbell and she advised
that she had spoken with Cooke over the weekend and she advised that
the police had been at the residence looking for him. He told her that the
warrant was “old” and was from 1998. Rochelle further advised that he
had called from a “215" telephone number and that she did not know his
whereabouts. Rochelle Campbell briefly checked her telephone “Caller
40
ID” to look for the information. She further advised that Cooke has a
sister, but that she did not know her full name or address.
6. Rochelle Campbell confirmed that Cooke lives at the residence and she
allowed officers to do a cursory check inside the residence to look for
Cooke. Cooke was not present at the residence.
7. James Cooke is being sought by Newark Police Detectives and your
affiant believes there is probable cause to search the above listed
residence for information, electronic or otherwise, to indicate the
whereabouts of James Cooke following his failure to appear for trial.
The Parties’ Contentions
Cooke argues first that the search warrant was faulty because the affidavit did not
establish probable cause to search the residence and because the warrant was a pretext for
searching for evidence relating to the homicide and the burglaries. The State responds that
the police had a valid interest in establishing Cooke’s whereabouts in connection with the
1999 charges. The Sta te also argues tha t the warrant indica ted that the residence would
contain evidence of Cooke’s whereabouts and that it established a logical nexus between
the search and the 1999 charges.
Defendant also argues that the language of the warrant is overbroad and does not
fulfill the so-called particula rity requirement. The State responds that the purpose of the
so-called particularity requirement is to give police meaningful guidance in the search and
that the warrant meets this requirement.
In addition, Cooke also argues that the items listed on the search warrant return are
beyond the scope of the warrant, which refers only to items that would assist in locating
41
Cooke. The Sta te replies tha t Campbell consented to police taking all of the items from
her home, and that she voluntarily signed the consent to search form. He next argues that
Ms. Campbell’s consent was coerced and invalidated by the fact that the warrant itself was
a pretext. The State responds by asserting that the police were lawfully in the residence
pursuant to a valid search warrant and that Ms. Campbell’s testimony shows that she
willingly consented to the police taking any items from her home and that she was not
coerced into so doing. Cooke, in turn, contends that the seizure of the items outside the
scope of the warrant is not justified under the plain view doctrine because the police were
not lawfully in the home and these items did not have immediate evidentiary value.
Finally, the State argues that the warrant was valid and that all items listed on the search
warrant return and consent were seized pursuant to the plain view doctrine.
Discussion
A
Probable Cause for Search Warrant
Cooke argues that the search warrant application did not establish probable cause
because the police had no genuine in terest in Cooke’s 1999 shoplifting charge. The State
argues that the police’s concern about the earlier charges was valid and that the warrant
established probable cause to believe that the residence would contain ev idence of Cooke’s
whereabouts. On a motion to suppress challenging the validity of a residential search
35State v. Sisson, 883 A.2d 868, 875 (Del. Super. Ct. 2005).
36Jensen v. State, 482 A.2d 105, 112 (Del. 1984).
37State v. Sisson, 883 A.2d at 877 (citing Hooks v. State, 416 A.2d 189, 203 (Del. 1980)).
42
warran t, the defendant bears the burden of showing by a preponderance of the evidence
that the search or seizure was unlawful.35
A finding of probable cause will not be invalidated by a hypertechnical, rather than
common sense, inte rpretation of a warrant affidav it.36 The warrant application must
demonstrate a logical nexus between the items sought and place to be searched.37
The search warrant states that probable cause exists to search for and seize the
following items:
Any and all paperwork o r information, elec tronic or o therwise , that would
indicate the whereabouts of James Cooke, including: Caller ID devices and
cellular telephone address book contact information. . . .
The search warrant states that these items were to be used in connection with the
prosecution of 1999 charges of shoplifting , hindering prosecution and crimina l contempt.
The affidavit es tablishes probable cause to search 9 L incoln Drive to determine
Cooke’s whereabouts. The criminal charge for which the capias was outstanding was
around six years old when the affidavit for this warrant was signed. But the information
was very fresh about Cooke’s residence possibly being at 9 Lincoln Drive as of a few days
before and on the day the warrant was sought. The affidavit specifie s Cooke had been in
very recent contact with the other resident at 9 Lincoln Drive. The warrant also notes that
38Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806, 812, 116 S.Ct. 1769, 1774, 135 L.Ed.2d 89,97(1996). See also United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 922 n. 23, 104 S.Ct. 3405, 3420 N. 23,
(continued...)
43
the Newark Police are seeking Cooke. The capias was in relation to a charge lodged by
the Delaware State Police, not the Newark Police.
Cooke concedes the continuing validity of the capias - that is, that it was outstanding
and is a basis to a rrest. He questions its staleness. But the capias is a legitimate reason
to arrest him. And the police had confirmed that he had been at 9 Lincoln Drive within
the last few days and learned the day this warrant was obtained that he had been in contact
with a female resident in the residence within the last day or two. The affidavit makes it
clear that the Newark Police were also seeking Cooke.
There was ample probable cause stated for the Justice of Peace to issue this search
warrant.
B
Pretext to Search for Evidence Related to the Homicide
Cooke argues that the search warrant is invalid because Det. Rubin’s subjective
agenda was to find items pertaining to the burglaries and the homicide. In reviewing
issues relating to a llegedly pretextual searches, the United States Supreme Court in Whren
v. United States declined to assess an otherw ise valid affidavit according to the subjective
motivations of individual officers: “not only have we never held. . . that an o fficer’s
motive invalidates objectively justifiable behavior under the Fourth amendment; but we
have repeatedly held and asserted the contrary.”38 And again , “the fact that the officer
38(...continued)82 L.Ed.2d 677, 698 n. 23 (1984)(eschewing inquiries into the subjective beliefs of lawenforcement officers); Caldwell v. State, 780 A.2d 1037, 1045 n. 9 (Del. 2001) (acknowledgingthat Whren forecloses federal constitutional claims of a pretextual stop).
39 Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. at 813, 116 S.Ct. at 1774, 135 L.Ed.2d at 98 (quotingScott v. United States, 436 U.S. 128, 138, 98 S.Ct. 1717, 1723, 56 L.Ed.2d 168 (1978).
40 See United States v. Villamonte-Marquez, 462 U.S. 579, 103 S.Ct. 2573, 77 L.Ed.2d22 (1983); United States v. Robinson, 414 U.S. 218, 94 S.Ct. 467, 38 L.Ed.2d 427 (1973); Scottv. United States, 463 U.S. 128, 98 S.Ct. 1717, 56 L.Ed.2d 168 (1978).
41 Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. at 813, 116 S.Ct. 1769 at 1774, 135 L.Ed.2d at 98(also noting that the constitutional basis for claims of intentionally discriminatory applications oflaws is the Equal Protection Clause rather than the Fourth Amendment).
44
does not have the state of mind which is hypothecated by the reasons which provide the
legal justification for the officer’s action does not invalidate the action as long as the
circumstances, viewed objectively, justify that action.” 39
Based on its line of previous cases raising the issues of law enforcement officers’
subjective intent,40 the Whren Court concluded that “[s ]ubjective intentions play no role
in ordinary probable-cause Fourth Amendment analysis.”41
The State does not deny that the Newark Police learned about Cooke’s 1999 capias
while investigating his possible involvement in the homicide and the burglaries. The fact
that police officers are investigating a person’s involvement in one set of crimes does not
preclude them from investigating the person’s suspected participa tion in other crimes. The
constitutional requirements, both State and Federal, must, of course, be met in either
42“Article I, section 6 of the Delaware Constitution, the search and seizure provision, issubstantively identical to the Federal provision and unquestionably protects the same interests.”State v. Phillips, 366 A.2d 1203, 1207 (Del. Super. Ct. 1976)(citing State v. Moore, 187 A.2d807 (Del. Super. Ct. 1963)).
45
case.42 Having reviewed the search warrant in light of the totality of the circumstances,
the Court concludes that the warrant authorized a lawful search of 9 Lincoln Drive for
evidence of the whereabouts of James Cooke and that it was not tainted or otherwise
invalidated by Det. Rubin’s motives. As noted, while the capias was six years old the
information about his potential residence was very fresh. Further, the warrant states the
Newark police were looking for him. The police did not have to establish Cooke lived at
9 Lincoln Drive in 1999. He has an outstanding, valid capias and the issue was his
whereabouts in June 2005.
C
Overly Broad Language
The search warrant authorized the police to search for and to seize:
Any and all paperwork o r information, elec tronic or o therwise , that would
indicate the whereabouts of James Cooke, including: Caller ID devices and
cellular telephone address book contact information.
Cooke argues that this language in the search warrant application describing the
items to be searched for is overly broad and does not come close to meeting the
particularity requirement found in both the State and Federal Constitutions, as well as in
11 Del.C. § 2306. He asserts that the search warrant is in reality a request for a general
4331 F.3d 831 (9th Cir. 1994).
44 Id. at 836.
45366 A.2d 1203, 1207 (Del. Super. Ct. 1976).
46817 A.2d 781, 786 (Del. 2003).
46
search for anything that might help to locate James Cooke. The State argues that the
warrant states the item s to be searched for and seized w ith sufficient particularity to give
the officers meaningful guidance in the search. Both parties cite to United States v. Clark43
as providing support for their opposing positions. The Clark Court found a search warrant
to be over broad where it authorized a search for “fruits and instrumentalities of [a]
violation of Title 21, U.S.C. § 841(a)(1)” because the warrant cited the statute but
provided no guidance as to what constituted a violation of it.44 That is not the case here.
Thus, Clark has no parallel to the case at bar.
The defense cites to State v. Phillips,45 which reiterates the general rule that search
warran ts must be sufficiently particular to prevent general exploratory searches. As
previously stated, § 2306 requires that the search warrant application describe the desired
items “as particularly as may be. . . .” In Fink v. State, the Delaware Supreme Court
reiterated that particu larity of language helps avoid explo ratory searches and affirmed this
Court’s ruling that a search warrant which called for seizure of “client files including, but
not limited to. . .” was neither vague nor ambiguous.46
47
In the case at bar, the warrant clearly called for evidence pertaining to Cooke’s
whereabouts, including phone devices that might track a phone number he had recently
called from, as well as paperwork, electronic information and any phone book containing
contact information. From a common sense perspective, these are obvious sources of
information for locating a person. Furthermore, the request for cell phone I.D. devices
is based on the affiant’s assertion that Cooke telephoned Campbell sometime between June
1 and June 6, and that he had called from a phone number with a 215 area code. The
Court concludes that the warrant was sufficien tly specific to guide the officers in their
search for evidence related to locating Cooke.
The search warrant inventory return states that, among other items, “various
documents” were seized during the search. At the hearing, Det. Rubin testified that the
“various documents” included the following:
[A]ssorted business cards, a New Jersey Court payment receipt, a 2004
planner, some handwritten phone numbers, a Cracker Barrel pay stub with
an address on it, and ATM payroll card, some New Jersey bail paperwork
with an address on it, a child support notice and a New Jersey restraining
order.
Det. Rubin stated that he and his fellow officers were looking for places to search for
Cooke and that these documents could help provide information or contacts that might lead
to him. The Court accepts th is testimony as both credible and reasonable and concludes
that the items described as “various documents” were lawfu lly seized pursuant to a valid
search warrant.
47The State argues that all items were properly seized under various exceptions to thewarrant requirement, “[f]irst and foremost. . . under the inevitable discovery doctrine, given thatRochelle Campbell. . . consented to the search.” State’s Supplemental Brief, May, 2006.Inevitable discovery is a viable exception to the exclusionary rule providing that evidence obtainedin the course of illegal police conduct will not be suppressed if the prosecution can prove that theincriminating evidence “would have been discovered through legitimate means in the absence ofofficial misconduct.” Cook v. State, 374 A.2d 264, 267-68 (Del. 1977) (citations omitted). InCook, police found money during a frisk for weapons, and the Court held that, assuming that theseizure of the currency was beyond the scope of a reasonable search for weapons, the moneywould have been found on the defendants in the course of an inventory search at the police stationsubsequent to arrest.
Although the State refers to inevitable discovery as a sort of umbrella for the exceptionsof consent and plain view, these exceptions are separate and distinct from inevitable discovery.Because the State’s factual arguments are based on consent and plain view, the Court addressesthese exceptions but not inevitable discovery.
48State v. Harris, 642 A.2d 1242, 1245 (Del. Super. Ct. 1993) (citing Schneckloth v.(continued...)
48
D
Excep tions to the Exclus ionary Rule
In its post-hearing briefing, the State argues that all the evidence was validly seized
because Roche lle Campbell consented to it. 47 The State also argues that the items listed
on the search warrant inventory return were seized pursuant to the plain view exception
to the exclusionary rule. Inherent in these arguments is a concession that all the items
other than “various documents” are beyond the scope of the search warrant, as Cooke
argues. He contends that neither consent nor plain view allows admission of any of the
items because the warrant itself was invalid.
The Court has found the warrant valid and, therefore, considers the exceptions.
The State has the burden of proving that either one of the exceptions to the exclusionary
rule applies.48
48(...continued)Bustamonte, 412 U.S. 218, 222, 93 S.Ct. 2041, 2045, 36 L.Ed.2d 854, 869 (1973)).
49 Transcript of Suppression Hearing (February 2, 2006) at pp. 83-84.
49
At the hearing, De t. Rubin acknowledged his initial indecision regarding the
evidence and the inventory and consent to search forms:
When we returned to the residence, Detective Corcoran, when I met with
him, had explained to me what he had located during his search. At that
point Detective Corcoran and I kind of went back and forth talking to each
other as to whether we could take those items under the search warrant but
we believed them to be something that had value to us, that we could take it.
However, my experience was in most – or all of those situations it has
always been some sort of contraband, some – when we are doing a search
warrant, we find drugs or we find weapons or what have you.
So at that poin t I wasn’t to tally sure as to whe ther I could take those items
or not. So I decided to do a consent search form to document taking those
items with Rochelle, and she didn’t have a problem with us taking those
items. So rather than put them on the search warrant, she told me that it was
fine to take them and we documented those items on the consent form.49
Thus, Det. Rubin conceded that he was uncertain about how to deal with the
evidence seized. In addition to the “various documents” listed on the warrant return,
which were lawfully taken pursuant to the warrant, the search warrant return also lists the
following items:
! One pair blue and white men’s shoes
! Composition book
! Cassette tape
! Three disposable cameras
! Cell phone – Nokia
! Bicycle.
50 391 U.S. 543, 88 S.Ct. 1788, 20 L.Ed.2d 797 (1968).
51 Bumper v. North Carolina, 391 U.S. at 550, 88 S.Ct. at 1792, 20 L.Ed.2d at 803.
50
The Consent to Search form, which was signed by Rochelle Campbell at 12:20 a.m.
on June 7, lists the following items and times:
! Handwriting sample (Corcoran at 12:10 a.m.)
! Flashlight (Corcoran at 7:40 p.m .)
! Usher CD (Corcoran at 8:25 p.m.)
! Gloves (Rubin at 12:12 a .m.)
! Book– The Good Wife (Corcoran at 11:30)
! 2 bent screwdrivers (Corcoran at 8:39 and 9:00)
E
Consent to Search
Cooke argues that the holding in Bumper v. North Carolina,50 controls the outcome
of the consent issue in this case. In Bumper, the United States Supreme Court found that
the Fourth Amendment prohibits admission of evidence obtained by the consent of a person
who had been deceived into be lieving tha t police officers had a search warrant.51 The facts
that gave rise to this holding were that four police officers went to the suspect’s
grandmother’s house, entered uninvited and announced that they had search warran t,
which they did not. The elderly resident, relying on the representation that there was a
search warrant, acquiesced to the search. The police seized a rifle that the State later
attempted to admit as evidence at trial, relying on consent rather than on a non-existent
search warrant. The grandmother testified that when the officer said he had a warrant she
52Id.
53626 F.2d 753 (9th Cir. 1980).
54412 U.S. 218, 93 S.Ct. 2041, 36 L.Ed.2d 854 (1973).
55Schneckloth v. Bustamante, 412 U.S. at 227, 93 S.Ct at 2047- 48, 36 L.Ed.2d at 863.
51
believed him. As the Supreme Court sta ted, “When a law enforcement officer claims
authority to search a home under a warran t, he announces in effect that the occupant has
no right to resist the search.” 52 Cooke also relies on United States v. Johnson, in which
the Ninth C ircuit of Appeals invalidated a consensual search where the officers gave
fictitious names in order to gain entry into the residence.53
It is undisputed that Det. Rubin was forthright in identifying h imself to Rochelle
Campbell as a Newark Police detective. She said she would not permit their entry without
a warrant. The police ob tained a warrant that this Court finds valid. There is simply no
evidence of police duplicity or deceit. The Court finds that the police officers in the case
at bar did not make any misrepresentations to Campbell or otherwise deceive her and that
Bumper does not govern the consen t issues in this case.
Bumper’s inapplicability means the analysis turns to the issue of consent, which is
governed by the voluntariness standard best articulated in Schneckloth v. Bustamonte.54
In Schneckloth , the United States Supreme Court held that the question of whether a
consent to a search was voluntary or was the product of duress or coercion, express or
implied is a question of fact to be determined from the totality of the circumstances, and
knowledge of the right to re fuse consent is a fac tor to be taken into account. 55
52
Before analyzing the seizure of various items, the Court notes several things about
Campbell and her testimony. She came across as intelligent and forthright. Even though
she did not like the FBI agent’s heavy-handed threat abou t her children, the Court is
convinced by her words and demeanor that th is threat did not play a role in her substantive
decisions in this matter.
With several police at her door on June 6th, she refused their entry without a
warran t. During the entire encounter between her and the police on the 6th and 7th, the
Court finds nothing which overcame her will or invalidated her consent. That she believed
some of the items seized had little or no evidentiary value is irrelevant. She was in the
company of the police for several hours, but that length of time d id not act as a basis to
overcom e her will.
The Court notes that Ms. Campbell was aware o f her right to withhold consent and
that she in fact asserted her right to demand a search warrant, wh ich Det. Rubin obtained.
After the search was completed, Campbell gave her consent to seizure of items beyond the
scope of the warrant. The question before the Court is whether, under a totality of the
circumstances perspective, this consent was voluntary and not the product of coercion or
other overbearing on the part o f the police.
The Court begins with the handwriting sample and the gloves because the evidence
pertaining to their seizure is clear. These items are listed on the consent form and are
shown to have been taken at 12:10 a.m. and 12:12 a.m., respectively, almost immediate ly
56 State’s Supplemental Brief (May 1, 2006) at 9.
57 Id. at 11.
53
after Det. Rubin and Campbell returned to her house. Campbell testified that she turned
over these items herself because Rubin had asked her about Cooke’s gloves, based on the
ATM picture in which Cooke appeared, and a hat and the handwriting sample because she
knew the police were in terested in Cooke’s handwriting. Det. Rubin also testified that he
had asked Campbell about Cooke’s gloves during the interview and that Campbell of her
own volition retrieved them from a diaper bag and gave them to him. Det. Rubin also
testified that Campbell voluntarily gave the handwriting sample to Corcoran, although Det.
Rubin did not know where she got it from. Because Det. Rubin’s testimony and
Campbell’s testimony are consistent, the Court concludes tha t Campbell voluntarily
consented to seizure of the gloves and the handwriting sample.
The State argues that Cam pbell verbally consented to the seizure of all the other
items listed on both the search warrant inventory and the consent form. In general terms,
the State asserts that Campbell more than once consented to the seizure of “any items from
her home”56 and “those additional items from her residence that weren’t per se covered by
the search warrant.”57 Without elaboration, the State claims consent specifically for the
seizure of the shoes, the cassette tape, the d isposable cameras and the bike.
At the hearing, Det. Rubin testified that after he and Det. Corcoran completed the
forms, he explained the consent form to Campbell and tha t they read it together. He stated
58 Transcript of Suppression Hearing (Feb. 2, 2006) at 90.
54
that he did not threaten or force her to sign and that she showed no hesitation in signing
it. In regard to Campbell’s verbal consent to items on the consent form, he was asked only
about the flashlight, and he stated that “[s]he didn’t have a p roblem with it.”58
In his affidav it submitted in response to the motion to suppress, Det. Rubin asserted
that the disposable cameras and the Nok ia cell phone were taken based on Campbell’s
consent, and that she told him that the cameras contained recent pictures of Cooke, which
might help locate him. Rubin also believed that the cameras may have contained pictures
of the crime scene, although he offered no basis for this belief. Rubin knew that the 911
call was made on a cell phone and that Cooke carried a cell phone with him.
Campbell testified that she volun tarily consented to the seizure o f any items the
officers needed. She stated that the police were still searching her house when she and
Det. Rubin returned from the police station. Campbell testified that Det. Rubin showed
her the things that had been seized in her absence. He also showed her both the search
warrant return and the consent to search form. Her recollection of the two forms was
vague, but she remembered seeing them. Until she saw the consent to search form, she
was not aware of all the items seized. Det. Rubin explained to her that he needed to take
certain items in addition to those taken under the search warrant and asked her to sign the
consent form. She stated that she did not feel any pressure to sign the paper and that she
understood that she was giv ing her permission for him to take the items.
59 Transcript of Suppression Hearing (Feb. 1, 2006) at 125.
55
Ms. Campbell consistently testified that she was willing for the police to take the
items they needed for the investigation, but she acknowledged that she was initially
reluctant for them to take the C.D., the cameras and the book, which were hers and she
was unsure why the police needed them. She acknowledged that the events were upsetting
to her and that she did not pay attention to how the items were divided up between the two
forms. Nonetheless she was willing for the officers to take what they wanted.
On cross-examination, defense counsel probed into Campbell’s understanding of the
difference between a voluntary consent and a consent given based on a search warrant, that
is, a mere acquiescence. In regard to items that were seized while Campbell was at the
police station, the following exchange took place:
Q. Well, here’s the difference and I want to–were you consenting to their
taking it or were you letting them take it because they had a search
warrant? That’s the question.
A. I was consenting to them to take it.59
Thus, Campbell’s direct examination and cross examination show that she
knowingly gave her verbal consent to items not taken under the search warrant. She
voluntar ily handed over some items of evidence herself, agreed to seizure of the evidence
found by the police and signed the consen t form for additional items. L ike any reasonable
person in her situation, Campbell was at first reluctant to agree to certain things proposed
by the police. Accompanying Rubin to the police station meant leaving her ch ildren with
56
the officers, but she agreed partly because she did not feel pressure and partly because the
children were well taken ca re of by the officers. She was initially reluctant about the
seizure of items that belonged to her, but when she understood the reasons, she willingly
agreed.
Ms. Campbell repeatedly stated on both direct examination and cross examination
that the police officers were polite and did not try to force her to do anything she did not
want to do. She did not fee l that she was pressured or coerced into anything. During the
questioning at the police station, FBI Special Agent Ross made a statement that upset her.
He said that if she was lying or covering up for Cooke, she and her children could have
problems. This single assertion does not vitiate the otherwise non-coercive conduct of the
officers, particularly Det. Rubin, who was the p rimary con tact person with her.
The testimony of both Campbell and Det. Rubin show that Campbell did not let the
officers search her home until the police obta ined a warrant. The Court has found that
warrant to be valid. Cooke points out that Det. Corcoran se ized most of the items while
Campbell was at the police station and that she did not consent to the seizure until after it
had already taken place. However, Campbell knew that a search was in progress when
she left the house and she did not register surprise that it had continued and was continuing
when she arrived home. In fact, on cross-examination, she squarely voiced her consent
when she threw back a question at defense counsel: “[w]hat do you expect them to do,
leave the items there and then when I got back, to pick them back up and, you know, if
60 Transcript of Suppression Hearing (Feb. 1, 2006) at 125.
61 Wicks v. State, 552 A.2d 462, 464 (Del. 1988) (citing Young v. State, 339 A.2d 723,724 (Del. 1975)).
62 See DeShields v. State, 534 A.2d 630, 643 (Del. 1987) (where verbal consent was giveon the day of the search, but unlike here, was memorialized in writing two days later).
63 Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 412 U.S. at 228, 93 S.Ct. at 2048, 36 L.Ed.2d at 863.
57
they found something that they thought was evidence, wouldn’t they–shouldn’t they take
it?”60 Campbell knew a search was in progress and her common sense told her that the
officers would locate evidence in her absence. Searches and seizures are separate acts, and
each must satisfy the constitutional requirement of reasonableness.61 The Court is satisfied
that Campbell’s consent, given after she arrived back at her home, was reasonable and
voluntary.62 The Court concludes that the State has carried its burden of proving by a
preponderance of the evidence that Campbell’s subsequent consent to seizure of items
beyond the scope of the warrant was voluntary and was not the product of duress or
coercion, either express or implied.63
F
Plain View
Det. Corcoran of the Newark Police seized most of the items listed on the inventory
and consent forms, but he did no t testify at the suppress ion hearing. The Court, therefore,
has no evidentiary basis at this point on which to rule on the issue of plain view seizure.
The Court has found that the search warrant established probable cause to search
Cooke’s residence for evidence of his whereabouts and that other items of evidence were